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Nov 11, 2025
This week’s themeWords from English English This week’s words shrive
The Confession, 1838
Art: Giuseppe Molteni
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargshrive
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
From Old English scrift (confession, penance), from scrifan (to shrive:
to impose penance). Earliest documented use: before 1150.
NOTES:
Here’s a word that does it all, like a one-stop soul shop. Shrive
covers the entire moral supply chain: hearing a confession, handing out
a penalty, and wiping the slate clean. Earlier, people went to priests for shriving. These days, they go to therapists, life coaches, and podcasts. (“Tell me about your mother... and say three Hail Marys.”) The most common form of the word lives in the phrase “to get short shrift”, meaning to receive little time, attention, or sympathy. Originally, the quick confession and absolution given to condemned prisoners before execution. USAGE:
“The final fine stays at $500, and the new member is properly shriven.” Colby Cosh; Liberal MP Gets off Lightly for Theft of Flyer; Calgary Herald (Canada); Jan 31, 2022. See more usage examples of shrive in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
If you put fences around people, you get sheep. Give people the room they
need. -William L. McKnight, businessman and philanthropist (11 Nov
1887-1978)
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